LAWRENCE SHERIFF SCHOOL a National Teaching School RUGBY
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LAWRENCE SHERIFF SCHOOL A National Teaching School RUGBY CONSULTATION ON ADMISSIONS POLICY FOR 2019-2020 In accordance with the School Admissions Code (2014), the Governors of Lawrence Sheriff School are consulting on their draft Admissions Policy for the 2019-2020 Academic Year. The consultation period runs from midday on Monday 18 December 2017 to midday on Monday 29 January 2018. Anyone wishing to comment on the draft document should write to Mrs Beardshaw, Clerk to the Governors, Lawrence Sheriff School, Clifton Road, Rugby, CV21 3AG or by email to [email protected] by the deadline of midday on 29 January 2018. A copy of the consultation document will be available on the school website during the consultation period at www.lawrencesheriffschool.com under Parents and Students/Key Information/School Policies or a hard copy can be supplied on request to Mrs Beardshaw, Clerk to the Governors. Thank you. 1 LAWRENCE SHERIFF SCHOOL A National Teaching School RUGBY Lawrence Sheriff School Admissions Policy 2019-2020 Introduction Lawrence Sheriff School is a boys’ grammar school with academy status, with a co-educational sixth form from September 2018. Admissions are based on a process of selection having regard to children’s academic ability. In Rugby there are two other academically selective schools: a girls’ grammar school with academy status (Rugby High School) and a mixed bilateral academy (Ashlawn). The school has a Published Admission Number of 120 places in Year 7 for 2019-2020. The school has a Published Admission Number of 80 places in Year 12 for 2019-2020. Formal responsibility for determining admissions rests with the school’s governors. However, in discharging these responsibilities in relation to Year 7 the governors have engaged Warwickshire County Council’s Admissions Service (Warwickshire Admissions) to operate the process on the school’s behalf. This policy has been drawn up to meet the requirements of the Department for Education School Admissions Code which came into force in December 2014. Providing information to Parents During the summer term of 2018 parents/carers of all the children in Year 5 in primary schools in Warwickshire will be issued with a leaflet about the process of selection as will the parents/carers of children attending independent schools if the schools request it. Parents/carers with children not attending these schools can contact the Admissions Service to request that information. Parents/carers will be asked to register if they want their child to be tested. 2 Eligibility and Oversubscription Criteria for Entry in Year 7 Candidate Age If your child was born between 01 September 2007 and 31 August 2008 you may apply for them to sit the test for entry in September 2019. See Section on “Admission out of chronological year group”, if appropriate. Eligibility A map, setting out the respective admission areas is attached (see Appendix 1 for further important details of the residency rules). Eligibility for entry to Year 7 is dependent on the child’s sex being male. Evidence will be requested to prove whether the child is resident within the priority areas by the deadline of Monday 31 December 2018. Warwickshire Admissions will require, on behalf of the school, evidence of the applicant’s home address. Parents/Carers will be notified each time this is required. The Admissions Service may also carry out a home visit to the family to further verify an applicant’s address. Similarly, where relevant, Warwickshire Admissions will require, on behalf of the School, evidence that a child is in receipt of the Children in Care/Children Adopted from Care Pupil Premium/Service Children Premium. The School reserves the right to withdraw the offer of a place if it is established that the offer has been made on the basis of a fraudulent or intentionally misleading application. The child must have been registered for the entrance test for the School by the deadline of Friday 29 June 2018 and completed that test; and the parent/carer must have named the school on the Common Application Form, which must have been submitted on time to the home authority. Late entrance test registrations and late secondary school applications will not be considered in the first round of offers. Oversubscription Criteria Children with a Statement of Special Educational Needs or Education, Health and Care (EHC) Plan1 naming the school who meet the required standard for entry (Automatic Qualifying Score) must be admitted and this could therefore reduce the number of places available. There is no guarantee of a place being available, but places up to the Published Admission Number will be allocated in the following order, where children meet the necessary academic and eligibility entry requirements, assuming that an offer from a higher preference has not been made: Category 1 - Looked After Children2 and all previously looked after children (previously looked after children are children who were looked after, but ceased to be so because they were 1 A Statement of Special Educational Need is a statement made by the local authority under Section 324 of the Education Act 1996 specifying the special educational provision required for that child. An Education, Health and Care plan is a plan made by the local authority under Section 37 of the Children and Families Act 2014 specifying the special education provision required for that child. 2 A 'looked after child' is a child who is (a) in the care of a local authority, or (b) being provided with accommodation by a local authority in the exercise of their social services functions (see the definition in Section 22(1) of the Children Act 1989) at the time of making an application to a school. 3 adopted3 (or became subject to a child arrangements order4 or special guardianship order5) who achieve the Automatic Qualifying Score or above for this school, for this particular year of entry or between one and twenty marks below the Automatic Qualifying Score. Category 2 - Up to 10 places will be allocated to children who were in receipt of the Pupil Premium6/Service Children Premium7 at the point of registering to sit the entrance test living in the Eastern area of Warwickshire or the priority circle (the centre of which is the Rugby Water Tower and has a radius of 10.004 miles), who achieve the Automatic Qualifying Score or above for this school, for this particular year of entry or whose scores are between one and twenty marks below the Automatic Qualifying Score for this school, for this particular year of entry (including any re-offers which are made from the waiting list in this category after Friday 1 March 2019). Category 3 - Up to 55 children living in the Eastern Area of Warwickshire* who achieve the Automatic Qualifying Score or above for this school, for this particular year of entry. Category 4 - Up to 55 places will be allocated to children living in the priority circle (the centre of which is the Rugby Water Tower and has a radius of 10.004 miles – this also includes the Eastern Area) who achieve the Automatic Qualifying Score or above for this school, for this particular year of entry. Category 5 - Other children living inside or outside of the priority areas who achieve the Automatic Qualifying Score or above for this school, for this particular year of entry. Category 6 - Other children living inside or outside of the priority areas who score above the minimum score for the waiting list for this school, for this particular year of entry. Within all criteria first priority is given to those achieving the highest score in the entrance test. In the case of a tied score priority will be given to children who were in receipt of the Children in Care/Children Adopted from Care/Pupil Premium/Service Children Premium at the date of registering to sit the entrance test. Where there is a further need to split any category or group of children, places will be offered in accordance with distance between the child’s home and school (shortest distance = highest priority). Distance will be calculated by the straight line measurement from the address point coordinate of the applicant’s home address (as set by Ordinance Survey) to the centre point (“centroid”) of the school (located at the centre of the doorway to the Headmaster’s Office). (All distances are subject to changes which may occur with updates of mapping data). This applies equally 3 This includes children who were adopted under the Adoption Act 1976 (see section 12 adoption orders) and children who were adopted under the Adoption and Childrens Act 2002 (see section 46 adoption orders). 4 Child arrangements orders are defined in s.8 of the Children Act 1989, as amended by s.12 of the Children and Families Act 2014. Child arrangements orders replace residence orders and any residence order in force prior to 22 April 2014 is deemed to be a child arrangements order. 5 See Section 14A of the Children Act 1989 which defines a ‘special guardianship order’ as an order appointing one or more individuals to be a child’s special guardian (or special guardians). 6 The pupil premium is additional funding paid annually to schools under section 14 of the Education Act 2002 for the purposes of supporting the attainment of disadvantaged children. 7 The service premium is additional funding paid annually to schools under section 14 of the Education Act 2002 for the purposes of supporting the pastoral needs of the children of Armed Services personnel 4 to those living inside and outside the County’s boundary. Where there is a further need to split any category places will be offered by random allocation, ie allocated using a computerised random number generator.